Abstract

Garzón Lagoon is a temperate shallow coastal lagoon influenced by sea level variation. A study on the isotopic composition of Holocene sedimentary organic matter was performed. Although the system was subject to significant changes in sea level, leading to important changes in the lagoon morphometry during the Holocene, the composition of the organic matter was rather surprisingly constant, being dominated by particulate organic matter of marine origin, and to a lesser extent of terrestrial origin. By ∼5000 yr BP, the sea level was +5 m amsl, and the lagoon displayed the largest morphometric dimensions. Once the sea level decreased towards 3000 yr BP and present times, the lagoon area progressively decreased. Even though we inferred significant changes in morphometry, the composition of the organic matter remained relatively constant, as the lagoon was always connected to the ocean, a condition that remains today, at least intermittently during storms or heavy rains. Only after the 1960s, a slight change in the organic matter composition was detected, consisting of a decrease in particulate organic matter of terrestrial origin.

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